The player was "AllinAlvin," a grinder who couldn't be bothered to wake up before Level 3. Alvin had paid for the Blitz package: $500 for 30 days of auto-buy-ins. The script was his digital butler.
Every morning at 8:00 AM, the WSOP's daily "Blitz" turbo satellites began—10-minute levels, 5,000 starting chips, and a thousand hopefuls clicking "register." But behind the lobby, a Python script monitored the tournament lobby like a hawk. Its job was simple: detect when a late registration period was about to close (Level 5, 00:30 remaining), then auto-register a specific player ID into the next available seat. wsop daily blitz script
Blitz recalculated. Standard logic: wait until 00:30 remaining. But a hidden subroutine—written by a sleep-deprived coder named Mike—interpreted the override as "ignore standard timing, register immediately." The player was "AllinAlvin," a grinder who couldn't
At Level 4, with 90 seconds left before late reg closed, Blitz scraped the API endpoint for tournament #34523. It saw 247 players registered, 53 seats left. Normal. Then it cross-referenced Alvin's bankroll—still 12,000 in chips from yesterday's cash session. Good. Every morning at 8:00 AM, the WSOP's daily